Bird On The Wire
an online column by Carmel Bird
No. 1
18 March 1998Is the book dying? I heard Alistair Cook in his Letter From
America last week
reflecting on the fact that
the Britannica is on CD-Rom and may
disappear as hard copy. He believes
the book is 'on the way out'. Maybe
he's right -- it often looks
that way. But being on the way out
doesn't necessarily mean leaving
the scene quickly or altogether.
It's a long time since people
queued up on the dock for
copies of the next
chapter of Great Expectations to
arrive from London -- the crowds
now gather at the cinema or rush
the video shop or get online. But it
seems to me that books
are still holding a little ground
that perhaps they will never give
up. They are now just one element in
the telling of -- and the marketing of --
stories.
At the opulent opening
night of the movie the
movie stars and the director
are the celebrities
we want to
see. We thirst not only for the plot
of the movie, but for
the details of the lives of the
stars. We are dimly aware that
Thomas Keneally wrote the
novel (Schindler's Ark)
that gave us Schindler's List,
but his is not the life we
want to see exposed in the
tabloids. However, when
the spectacle of the
movie has receded,
and we are left with the
video, some people still like
to be able to return to base, to go
back to the small, portable object
they can rest on the
edge of the bedclothes and read in
sections over a couple of weeks
before they go to sleep. The book is not
only for enjoyment, or for
information, but plays a big part in
our ability to reflect, to think;
a big part in the formation of
wisdom. The book is an elegant piece
of technology that has perhaps earned a
permanent tactile place in human society.
You may be surprised
to hear me talking
up the
book, since I have recently
made a CD-Rom to accompany a
novel (Red Shoes). What am I playing at?
I like experiments and I was doing an experiment. I don't know how it will
all turn out in
the end. And to
be fair, the book is
published in hard copy as well as
digitally. But will hard copy
drop off, leaving only Roms and
laser disks and books online and so on?
Perhaps people will really stop
reading words and just go
completely with the images and sounds?
Will people give up, forget how to
read? All that stuff about
humans moving from pictures to
hieroglyphics to letters -- is it a great
big circle leading back to pics?
I am enjoying hearing
how people are
using the book and
the CD-Rom of Red Shoes -- so many different ways of doing it.
I hope the Britannica in hard copy
doesn't die. And I have a
wild vision that in some kind
of utopian book place, bad books w
ill be the ones to disappear and
good books might have the
opportunity to get better. (Dream on
...)
HOMECopyright © Carmel Bird 1998. All rights reserved.